Source: AlJazeera America

Eight months after whistle-blower Edward Snowden set off a huge uproar by shedding light on the National Security Agency's unscrupulous surveillance practices, we are still learning about the vast extent of the snooping. Such revelations are vital to inform the public and enable a democratic process that could hold the government accountable. But they are accompanied by a very real danger: We may come to see privacy as a thing of the past.
The mind-boggling scope of the NSA's surveillance continues to make front-page news as a political story. But its most pernicious effects are social and psychological. We are getting accustomed to Big Brother. Our daily lives are now accessible to prying eyes and ears no farther away than the nearest computer or cellphone. Unless we directly challenge the system of mass surveillance now, the ruling elites may understand our complacency as consent, with results that extend the reach of surveillance and its damaging consequences. Even as it grows more familiar, this bulk collection of data is corroding civil society.
Mass surveillance amounts to a siege that subtly constrains our freedoms and injures social relations. Freewheeling civic engagement is in the line of fire. The surveillance state generates fearful conformity.
To resist the growing possibility of this mind-set, Feb. 11 was designated The Day We Fight Back, with more than 5,300 nonprofit groups and private companies joining forces to demand an end to the numbing tyranny of mass surveillance.
Where does this resolute anger come from? The widespread public discontent seeks to reject the myriad ways the NSA's spying has undermined and continues to undermine our common humanity.
The NSA's partnership with the cutting-edge tech sector has given immense power to the government and gigantic profits to private firms. It is an ongoing collaboration that makes a digital mockery of the Fourth Amendment commitment to "the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects."
By closely monitoring those it claims to respect and protect, the U.S. government is doing enormous and cumulative damage. In realms that stretch from public to intimate, people are growing acutely aware that much of what they say and do is becoming officially retrievable -- and might be used against them, someday, somehow.
Whether engaged in a phone discussion, email correspondence, online searches, banter at a party or even a quiet conversation at home, people are losing a sense of activity that is truly private. The omniscience wielded by authorities is crowding into the most human of spaces, casting an ominous shadow over free communication and boosting inclinations to self-censor.
The mistrust and cynicism due to regular surveillance only gets worse as top officials resort to mendacity to defend it. "We don't have a domestic spying program," President Barack Obama declared on "The Tonight Show" in early August, two months after the NSA scandal broke. He insisted, "There is no spying on Americans."
This lying became part of a whole dissembling repertoire. Five months later, in his much ballyhooed Jan. 17 speech about the NSA, Obama was still in deception mode, proclaiming, "The bottom line is that people around the world, regardless of their nationality, should know that the United States is not spying on ordinary people who don't threaten our national security."
But NSA documents provided by Snowden make clear that the U.S. government is spying on ordinary people every day -- on a humongous scale.
Along the way, surveillance has played a key role in the government's moves against whistle-blowers and journalists. In September the Obama administration proudly announced a long prison sentence for a former FBI agent who was tripped up by the Department of Justice's secret seizure of call records for 20 phone lines used by Associated Press reporters and editors. To all but the most pliant journalists, this trend is ominous and already destructive.
Even the media establishment is sounding the alarm. The Committee to Protect Journalists, a blue-ribbon press-freedom watchdog, issued an extraordinary report on Oct. 10, "The Obama Administration and the Press," warning that in Washington "government officials are increasingly afraid to talk to the press." Written by a former executive editor of The Washington Post, Leonard Downie Jr., the report is a damning indictment of the U.S. government's clampdown.
But the maneuvers against the press are just a small part of the U.S. snooping program at home and abroad. The NSA -- the world's most powerful and farthest-reaching surveillance agency -- spies on public and private realms with tremendous capabilities that encourage other countries to follow suit.
"The U.S. government has gone further than any previous government ... in setting up machinery that satisfies certain tendencies that are in the genetic code of totalitarianism," Jonathan Schell wrote last fall in The Nation. "One is the ambition to invade personal privacy without check or possibility of individual protection."
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